What is prostatitis and what is the effective treatment of prostatitis with folk remedies? As logic suggests, prostatitis is inflammation of the prostate gland. Typically, prostatitis occurs due to stagnation in this organ or the penetration of viruses or bacteria inside. Prostatitis develops in men, both young and elderly. Infection enters the prostate through various pathways, usually through urine, lymph, or blood.
The main symptoms of prostatitis include periodic discomfort in the genital area or above it, difficulty urinating, bowel problems, absence or weak erection, fever, and general weakness. There is also a very unusual sign of prostatitis – after urination, when the patient sits or bends his legs, a small but noticeable amount of urine is released. This syndrome is called the “last drop syndrome.”
The main goal of treating prostatitis, especially if you have chosen treatment with folk remedies, particularly if the inflammation has progressed to a chronic form, is to restore the normal structure and function of the prostate by strengthening the body. Only in combination with various measures to improve immunity can prostatitis also recede.
There are several decoctions:
• The first one is one hundred grams of birch buds in half a liter of seventy percent medical alcohol. This mixture is infused for half a month and taken one tablespoon four times a day (you can, of course, take more, but four times a day is sufficient).
• The second composition is more accessible – those who do not have alcohol and birch buds can infuse twenty grams of sunflower roots for one and a half times longer in a glass of vodka. The resulting mixture should be strained and added to the drink ten drops three times a day.
• There are also alcohol-free options – for a glass of boiled water, fifty grams of dried leaves of plantain, shake for half an hour, strain, and drink one tablespoon before meals, at least three times a day.
• Similar to the previous one, but slightly tastier, is the advice: two tablespoons of viburnum berries and honey in half a liter of boiled water, infused for an hour, strained, and drunk half a glass, the more often, the better (recommended five times a day).
• Pumpkin seeds can be eaten, which help with prostatitis – they contain zinc, and in large quantities. The only condition is no store-bought roasted seeds! Only dried from the market, in packages or by weight. Eat a shot glass a day, and you’ll also get rid of parasites.
• Add 200 grams of honey to 500 grams of ground dried pumpkin seeds. Mix well, make small balls the size of a nut. Eat one ball an hour or half an hour before meals twice a day. Do not swallow immediately; chew and suck – nutrients are absorbed at all levels of digestion. One course per year – until the balls are gone – and your prostate will no longer bother you.
• If you have the unpleasant condition of prostate hypertrophy (pathological enlargement), it is recommended to infuse five tablespoons of ground aspen bark in half a liter of vodka, infuse for half a month. The bark should be young, from small-diameter branches. It is recommended to take the tincture by a medium-sized spoon three times a day before meals. You can infuse kidneys instead of bark – the effect will be the same.
• Chestnut green husk, if made into tea, helps well with “lower” diseases. Simply brew and drink more often.
• Leech therapy, or hirudotherapy, is recommended for prostatitis. This new trend is not so absurd – prostatitis is a stagnant disease, and therefore leeches stimulate blood flow to this organ. But it is important to consult with a urologist before this very unusual treatment – you may have contraindications.
But of course, treating prostatitis with folk remedies is absurd if you don’t carry out its prevention.
Prevention is simple – do not overcool, do not excessively restrict sexual activity, consult a urologist a couple of times a year, and of course, lead a healthy lifestyle, temper yourself, and do exercises that stimulate metabolism and circulation of blood and lymph, and the latter, by the way, is dispersed only by body movements.